We must stop bad law before it’s too late

The Department of Justice should get a new name - like the Department That Can See No Evil, the Department of Dungeons or the Department of Cover-ups.

Debra J. Saunders

The Department of Justice should get a new name - like the Department That Can See No Evil, the Department of Dungeons or the Department of Cover-ups.

Once a bad law becomes the law of the land, it takes years of activism engaged by countless voices to force Washington to patch things up for a handful of the bad law's victims. In 1993, Clarence Aaron, a 24-year-old college student, was convicted for his role in a crack cocaine deal. Aaron neither bought nor sold drugs; he was paid $1,500 for connecting two dealers. Nonetheless, a federal court sentenced him to life without parole.

In "Snitch," a January 1999 "Frontline" documentary, producer Ofra Bikel reported how career dealers were able to reduce their sentences by testifying against Aaron, who was condemned to life in prison.

Few prosecutors would argue that life until death in prison is a just sentence for a first-time nonviolent offender. And yet the Department of Justice was content to let stand this out-of-whack punishment.

It took a small army of outraged individuals and attorneys some 14 years to win Aaron and seven other crack offenders commutations that President Obama signed Dec. 19.

I first wrote in favor of a presidential commutation for Aaron in 2001. In 2004, the Department of Justice pardon attorney recommended that President George W. Bush deny Aaron's request. In 2008, the White House returned the denial recommendation and asked a new pardon attorney to review the petition. Again, the Department of Justice recommended denial.

That never should have happened.

The pardon attorney is supposed to recommend clemency for worthy offenders. But as former pardon staff attorney Sam Morison told me, inside the Department of Justice, there's "institutional resistance" to fixing misdeeds committed by federal prosecutors.

It's easier to keep wronged offenders locked up and out of sight. Once outsiders identified Aaron as one, said Morison, "he was marked."

Later, ProPublica's Dafna Linzer reported in The Washington Post that federal pardon attorney Ron Rodgers had withheld the sentencing judge's and prosecutor's newfound support for a sentence reduction in 2008. That is, he misled President Bush. Inspector General Michael E. Horowitz confirmed Linzer's story - and still Rodgers remains the pardon attorney.

Practically nobody would argue that the feds should put a young adult away for life for a nonviolent conviction. But when it happens, and according to the ACLU it has happened with some 2,000 federal inmates, the Justice Department covers its tracks.

That's how a bad law does bad things. Think of the Affordable Care Act. Still in its infancy, the White House will tweak it to make it work. But once entrenched, there are no fixes.